| Andreas Broeckmann on Fri, 27 Aug 1999 09:28:18 +0100 |
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| Syndicate: <nettime> First Things First - Design Manifesto |
Date: Thu, 26 Aug 1999 13:22:56 +0200 (CEST)
From: Max Bruinsma <maxb@xs4all.nl>
FIRST THINGS FIRST 2000
A MANIFESTO
The manifesto below summons designers, visual communicators and
advertisers worldwide to concentrate on things more serious than promoting
dogfood and deodorants...
The manifesto, signed by 33 prominent graphic designers, art-directors and
critics, is published jointly this Autumn by seven international design
magazines: Adbusters (CAN), The AIGA Journal (USA), Blueprint (UK), Emigre
(USA), Eye (UK), Form (BDR), Items (NL).
The manifesto aims at stimulating the debate on the cultural and social
responsibility of designers. Signatories and publishers welcome its free
distribution.
For more information and background (introductions by Rick Poynor and
Chris Dixon, and the original 1964 manifesto that inspired First Things
First 2000): http://www.xs4all.nl/~maxb/ftf2000.htm
Reactions to: adbusters@adbusters.org editor@emigre.com maxb@xs4all.nl
First Things First 2000
a manifesto
We, the undersigned, are graphic designers, art
directors and visual communicators who have been
raised in a world in which the techniques and
apparatus of advertising have persistently been
presented to us as the most lucrative, effective and
desirable use of our talents. Many design teachers
and mentors promote this belief; the market rewards
it; a tide of books and publications reinforces it.
Encouraged in this direction, designers then apply
their skill and imagination to sell dog biscuits,
designer coffee, diamonds, detergents, hair gel,
cigarettes, credit cards, sneakers, butt toners,
light beer and heavy-duty recreational vehicles.
Commercial work has always paid the bills, but many
graphic designers have now let it become, in large
measure, what graphic designers do. This, in turn,
is how the world perceives design. The profession's
time and energy is used up manufacturing demand for
things that are inessential at best.
Many of us have grown increasingly uncomfortable
with this view of design. Designers who devote their
efforts primarily to advertising, marketing and
brand development are supporting, and implicitly
endorsing, a mental environment so saturated with
commercial messages that it is changing the very way
citizen-consumers speak, think, feel, respond and
interact. To some extent we are all helping draft a
reductive and immeasurably harmful code of public
discourse.
There are pursuits more worthy of our
problem-solving skills. Unprecedented environmental,
social and cultural crises demand our attention.
Many cultural interventions, social marketing
campaigns, books, magazines, exhibitions,
educational tools, television programs, films,
charitable causes and other information design
projects urgently require our expertise and help.
We propose a reversal of priorities in favor of more
useful, lasting and democratic forms of
communication - a mindshift away from product
marketing and toward the exploration and production
of a new kind of meaning. The scope of debate is
shrinking; it must expand. Consumerism is running
uncontested; it must be challenged by other
perspectives expressed, in part, through the visual
languages and resources of design.
In 1964, 22 visual communicators signed the original
call for our skills to be put to worthwhile use.
With the explosive growth of global commercial
culture, their message has only grown more urgent.
Today, we renew their manifesto in expectation that
no more decades will pass before it is taken to
heart.
signed:
Jonathan Barnbrook
Nick Bell
Andrew Blauvelt
Hans Bockting
Irma Boom
Sheila Levrant de Bretteville
Max Bruinsma
Si?n Cook
Linda van Deursen
Chris Dixon
William Drenttel
Gert Dumbar
Simon Esterson
Vince Frost
Ken Garland
Milton Glaser
Jessica Helfand
Steven Heller
Andrew Howard
Tibor Kalman
Jeffery Keedy
Zuzana Licko
Ellen Lupton
Katherine McCoy
Armand Mevis
J. Abbott Miller
Rick Poynor
Lucienne Roberts
Erik Spiekermann
Jan van Toorn
Teal Triggs
Rudy VanderLans
Bob Wilkinson
----------------------------------
max bruinsma
----------------------------------
http://www.xs4all.nl/~maxb
----------------------------------
amsterdam
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